“…Next, reverse osmosis restoration involves continued groundwater extraction, treatment, and reinjection of the treated water into the subsurface. In-situ chemical reduction and bioremediation technologies make use of chemical amendments to drive immobilization of redox-sensitive elements; such remediation processes have been demonstrated in the field for metal(loid)-contaminated groundwater (including uranium) using iron-reducing bacteria (e.g., Anderson et al, 2003), sulfate-reducing bacteria (e.g., Saunders et al, 2005Saunders et al, , 2008Wu et al, 2006;Watson et al, 2013), and injections of reductants such as dithionite, ferrous iron, or sulfide (e.g., Ludwig et al, 2007). The U.S. EPA has developed a series of technical framework documents that should be consulted for the application of MNA as a tool to restore aquifers following ISR operations (US EPA, 2007a,b;.…”